Film Review
Now into his eighth decade, director Jean Becker continues to make films that
whilst appearing to be naive and a little dépassé still
manage to beguile with their simple eloquence and understated compassion. In the same vein
as Becker's previous
Dialogue avec mon jardinier (2007),
La Tête en friche is a
slight drama set in a rural French setting which revolves around the unlikely
relationship of two very different characters. The film's
simplicity and dated cinematographic style make it an easy target for
critics who champion only that which is fresh and new, but these are the very
qualities which make the film so humane and involving.
Gérard Depardieu is the ideal choice for the lead role of the
sympathetic literary ignoramous who discovers a new lease of life
through reading. Despite being of an age when most of us
plan to settle back and enjoy a cosy retirement Depardieu remains one
of France's busiest actors - this is his third major role screen role
of the year, after
Dumas and
Mammuth. His character is a virtual reprise of
the one he played in Claude Berri's
Uranus (1990), an uneducated
country bumpkin who acquires an ardent passion for art late in
life. It is a role that not only suits Depardieu to a tee but
also seems to characterise his personality, the earthy, chummy exterior
belying the complex individual who lies beneath, someone with an
intense affinity with the music of the soul, poetry.
One of Jean Becker's main strengths is that he
invariably manages to extract convincing performances from his actors,
irrespective of their talent or experience. The real charm of this film
stems from the heart-warming rapport between Depardieu and his co-star
Gisèle Casadesus, a distinguished actress of stage and screen whose film
career stretches back to the 1930s. The scenes involving Depardieu and
Casadesus alone are extraordinarily captivating and moving, and what the
two actors manage to convey, very simply, yet very powerfully, is an
emotional attachment of the purest and most beautiful kind. It does us good to be
reminded that there are other kinds of relationship that a man and a woman
can enjoy together other than the purely carnal - alas, this is something that
cinema, and modern culture in general, appear to have overlooked in recent years.
La Tête en friche is by
no means a masterpiece. Its pace is at times painfully uneven, the secondary characters
are little more than rudely hewn caricatures and Jean-Loup Dabadie's screenplay (an
adaptation of Marie-Sabine Roger's novel) lacks the sophistication one
would expect from a writer of his standing. Yet, despite its
shortcomings, this is still is an engaging and life-affirming piece of
cinema, somewhat dated in its approach but nonetheless highly relevant
to today's audience. It is no bad thing to be reminded
that we should slow down, take stock and reacquaint ourselves with the
joys of literature.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Jean Becker film:
Bienvenue parmi nous (2012)
Film Synopsis
Germain may be considered a figure of fun by those who know him, a little
boy in a middle-aged man's body, but he leads a contented life and has nothing
to complain about, except, possibly, the mother who seems to want to disown
him. Now in his mid-forties, Germain has never got on well with his
mother. She refuses to tell him who his father is and now he lives
at the bottom of her garden in a caravan, the son she regards as a stupid
accident. Germain's inability to learn soon caused his teachers to
give up on him, so now he is as illiterate and uneducated as a six-year-old,
although this doesn't stop him finding odd jobs to support himself.
Germain likes to spend his leisure hours in the park, counting the pigeons
as they waddle past. It is during one of these excursions that he gets
to meet Margueritte, a friendly old woman. This is someone who has
seen the world and acquired a broad education. Germain is immediately
impressed by the old woman's erudition and he willingly accepts her help
in gaining an appreciation of the great works of literature. The uneducated
outsider suddenly acquires a profound love of the printed word and, through
his new friendship, he discovers a world he never knew existed. For
Margueritte, the encounter turns out to be just as fruitful, and when she
has problems of her own Germain is on hand to help her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.